mcs(1)

NAME

mcs- manipulate the comment section of an object file

SYNOPSIS

/usr/ccs/bin/mcs {-c| -d| -p| -V| -astring| -nname...} file...

DESCRIPTION

The mcs command is used to manipulate a section, by default the .comment section, in an ELF object file. It is used to add to, delete, print, and compress the contents of a section in an ELF object
file, and print only the contents of a section in a COFF object file. mcs cannot add, delete, or compress the contents of a section that is contained within a segment.

If the input file is an archive (see ar(3HEAD)), the archive is treated as a set of individual files. For example, if the -a option is specified,
the string is appended to the comment section of each ELF object file in the archive; if the archive member is not an ELF object file, then it is left unchanged.

mcs must be given one or more of the options described below. It applies, in order, each of the specified options to each file.

OPTIONS

The following options are supported:

-astring

Appends string to the comment section of the ELF object files. If string contains embedded
blanks, it must be enclosed in quotation marks.

-c

Compresses the contents of the comment section of the ELF object files. All duplicate entries are removed. The ordering of the remaining entries is not disturbed.

-d

Deletes the contents of the comment section from the ELF object files. The section header for the comment section is also removed.

-nname

Specifies the name of the comment section to access if other than .comment. By default, mcs deals with the section named .comment. This option can be used
to specify another section. mcs can take multiple -n options to allow for specification of multiple section comments.

-p

Prints the contents of the comment section on the standard output. Each section printed is tagged by the name of the file from which it was extracted, using the format file[member_name]: for archive files and file: for other files.

ATTRIBUTES

SEE ALSO

NOTES

When mcs deletes a section using the -d option, it tries to bind together sections of type SHT_REL and target sections pointed to by the sh_info section header field. If one is to be deleted, mcs attempts to delete the other of the pair.